Dynamically Regulating Homologous Recombination Enables Precise Genome Editing in Ogataea polymorpha .
Xin NiXiaoxin ZhaiWei YuMin YeFan YangYongjin J ZhouJiaoqi GaoPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
Methylotrophic yeast Ogataea polymorpha has become a promising cell factory due to its efficient utilization of methanol to produce high value-added chemicals. However, the low homologous recombination (HR) efficiency in O. polymorpha greatly hinders extensive metabolic engineering for industrial applications. Overexpression of HR-related genes successfully improved HR efficiency, which however brought cellular stress and reduced chemical production due to constitutive expression of the HR-related gene. Here, we engineered an HR repair pathway using the dynamically regulated gene ScRAD51 under the control of the l-rhamnose-induced promoter P LRA3 based on the previously constructed CRISPR-Cas9 system in O. polymorpha . Under the optimal inducible conditions, the appropriate expression level of ScRAD51 achieved up to 60% of HR rates without any detectable influence on cell growth in methanol, which was 10-fold higher than that of the wild-type strain. While adopting as the chassis strain for bioproductions, the dynamically regulated recombination system had 50% higher titers of fatty alcohols than that static regulation system. Therefore, this study provided a feasible platform in O. polymorpha for convenient genetic manipulation without perturbing cellular fitness.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- dna repair
- dna damage
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- copy number
- wild type
- wastewater treatment
- dna methylation
- cell proliferation
- cell therapy
- binding protein
- single cell
- high throughput
- long non coding rna
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- risk assessment
- carbon dioxide
- bone marrow